After spending over 50 years on and around the water, I have realized that without strong fisheries laws and effective conservation measures, the future of salt water fishing, and America's living marine resources, is dim. Yet conservation is given short shrift by national angling organizations and the angling press. I hope that this blog will incite, inform and inspire salt water fishermen to reclaim their traditional role as the leading advocates for the conservation of America's fisheries.

Although I would have
preferred to see the MAFMC develop a management plan, and so give shad and
river herring the protections provided by theMagnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act(Magnuson-Stevens), I wasn’t
particularly surprised by the decision. I had spoken with MAFMC members ahead
of the vote, and got the impression that anadromous species just weren’t high
on that council’s list of priorities.

One MAFMC member I spoke with said that it was time for the
council to return its focus to fish such as bluefish, summer flounder and black
sea bass.

Just what was the mission of the MAFMC, and all of the other
regional fishery management councils?

Was it to manage all “fish” in the ocean (Magnuson-Stevens’
definition of “fish” includes “finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all other
forms of marine animal and plant life other than marine mammals and birds”)?

Or was it to concentrate management resources on economically
important stocks, while paying far less attention to species that didn’t
directly support lucrative fisheries?

Magnuson-Stevens directs the regional fishery management
councils to, “for each fishery under its authority that requires conservation
and management, prepare and submit to the Secretary [of Commerce] (A) a fishery
management plan, and (B) amendments to each such plan that are necessary from
time to time.”

The law defines “fishery” as “one or more stocks of fish which
can be treated as a unit for purposes of conservation and management and which
are identified on the basis of geographical, scientific, technical, recreational
and economic characteristics; and…any fishing for such stocks.”

Based on that language alone, one could argue that a regional
fishery management council has an obligation to produce a management plan for
any marine animal or plant (excluding only birds and marine mammals) under its
authority which is in need of conservation and management, whether or not such
stocks are being actively fished.

On the other hand, the stated findings and purposes, which
underlie Magnuson-Stevens, tell a very different story and emphasize economic
concerns.

One finding states that America’s “fisheries resources
contribute to the food supply, economy, and health of the Nation and provide
recreational opportunities.” Another asserts that “Commercial and recreational
fishing constitutes a major source of employment and contributes significantly
to the economy of the Nation…”

Magnuson-Stevens also contains a finding that “A national
program for the development of fisheries which are underutilized or not
utilized by the United States fishing industry…is necessary to assure that our
citizens benefit from the employment, food supply, and revenue which could be
generated thereby.” That finding is joined by one with a more local focus,
which says that “Pacific Insular Areas contain unique historical, cultural,
legal, political, and geographical circumstances which make fisheries resources
important in sustaining their economic growth.”

There are no similar findings that emphasize the importance of
intact ecosystems. The only one that mentions ecosystems at all states that “A
number of the Fishery Management Councils have demonstrated significant
progress in integrating ecosystem considerations in fisheries management using
the existing authorities provided under this Act,” without an accompanying
statement as to why such approach is important.

Another finding states that “Habitat considerations should
receive increased attention,” but only because marine habitat loss poses “One
of the greatest long-term threats to the viability of commercial and
recreational fisheries.”

The findings thus paint a picture of Magnuson-Stevens as a law
which only concerns itself with ecosystems issues when such issues have a
direct bearing on economically important activities.

Such picture is reinforced by the stated purposes of the law.

One such purpose is “to promote domestic commercial and
recreational fishing under sound conservation and management principles…”
Another is “to encourage the development by the United States fishing industry
of fisheries which are currently underutilized or not utilized by United States
fishermen…”

There is no similar stated purpose to promote the preservation
of marine ecosystems, or to encourage the preservation of fish stocks which are
not currently harvested, although the need to protect essential fish habitat is
specifically mentioned.

One of the key sections of the revised guidelines addressed the
question of when a stock of fish “requires conservation and management.”

While the language of the statute seems to give a regional
fishery management council broad discretion in deciding that question, the
guidelines set forth ten discreet criteria which should be used in making such
decision. One is whether “The stock is an important component of the marine
environment.”

That is the only criterion that relates to the ecosystem. The
remainder include considerations such as “The stock is a target of a fishery,”
“The stock is important to commercial, recreational, or subsistence users,”
“The fishery is important to the Nation or to the regional economy,” “The
economic condition of a fishery and whether [a fishery management plan] can
produce more efficient utilization,” and “The needs of a developing fishery,
and whether [a fishery management plan] can foster orderly growth.”

Thus, it’s probably safe to argue that, as things stand today,
the regional fishery management councils should be spending most of their time
managing economically important species, rather than addressing ecosystem
issues.

It’s also probably safe to argue that such emphasis on existing
fisheries for a relative handful of species will not provide the greatest
overall benefit to the nation in the long term, and thus creates an obstacle to
achieving optimum yield from the nation’s fish stocks.

Fish do not live in a vacuum. Each species, whether economically
important or not, interacts with and affects a host of other species. It is
impossible to impose management measures on a single stock and not have such
measures impact other stocks within the same ecosystem.

Even that statement is an oversimplification, for it suggests
that the ecosystems themselves are static, and that each fish has but one place
in a single ecosystem. The truth is far more complex.

The river herring caught in an offshore mackerel trawl swims in
very different waters from a river herring being chased by striped bass in Long
Island Sound, which enters yet another ecosystem as it ascends a river to
spawn; however, a single fish will pass through all three environments over the
course of a year. A summer flounder exists in two very different worlds when it
hunts shrimp in the channels of a shallow coastal bay and when it winters,
sixty fathoms down, at the edge of the continental shelf.

In each case, such fish are part of a web of predators and prey
that works best, on behalf of all of its members, when every strand of that web
is intact.

Thus, should Congress decide to address Magnuson-Stevens in the
upcoming session, it would do well to amend the law in a way that requires
regional fishery management councils to place a greater emphasis on maintaining
healthy and intact ecosystems. For when such ecosystems thrive, the
economically important fish that they host are more likely to thrive as well.

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This essay first appeared in "From the Waterfront," the blog of the Marine Fish Conservation Network. "From the Waterfront" may be found at http://conservefish.org/blog/